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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
LOUIS ANTHONY (TONY) COX, JR., PH.D, FOUNDER
Cox Associates, 503 Franklin Street, Denver, Colorado, 80218
(303)-898-1814 (Phone); (303)-388-0609 (Fax); [email protected]
Tony Cox is President of Cox Associates (www.cox-associates.com) and its new subsidiary, MoirAI,
a Denver-based AI/ML and analytics company specializing in computational toxicology, public and
occupational health, safety, and environmental risk analysis; epidemiology; policy analytics; and
customer behavior modeling. Since 1986, Cox Associates’ analysts and scientists have applied
advanced analytics to measurably improve health and environment risk assessment and decision-
making for public and private sector clients. In 2006, Cox Associates was inducted into the Edelman
Academy of the Institute for Operations Research and Management Science (INFORMS), recognizing
outstanding real-world achievements in the practice of operations research and the management
sciences. In 2012, Dr. Cox was inducted into the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) “For
applications of operations research and risk analysis to significant national problems.” He has served
as a member of the National Academies' Board on Mathematical Sciences and their Applications
(BMSA) (2012-2016) and as Chair of the Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC) for the
United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
Dr. Cox holds a Ph.D. in Risk Analysis and an S.M. in Operations Research, both from MIT; an AB
from Harvard University; and is a graduate of the Stanford Executive Program. He is Associate
Professor of Business Analytics at the University of Colorado, Denver, where he has also has served
as Honorary Full Professor of Mathematics lecturing on applied statistics, data science, decision and
risk analysis, biomathematics, health risk modeling, and causality; on the Faculties of the Center for
Computational Mathematics and the Center for Computational Biology; and as Clinical Professor of
Biostatistics and Informatics at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center. He has served as
an expert in risk analysis on many National Academies, World Health Organization, EPA, USDA, and
other agency projects, committees, and advisory boards.
Dr. Cox is Editor-in-Chief of Risk Analysis: An International Journal. He is Area Editor for Real World Applications for the Journal of Heuristics, and is on the Editorial Boards of Decision
Analysis and the International Journal of Operations Research and Information Systems. He is a
Fellow and an Edelman Laureate of INFORMS, a member of the American Statistical Association
(ASA), and a lifetime Fellow of the Society for Risk Analysis (SRA). In 2015 and 2018, his research
applying machine learning to high-throughput screening data won Best Published Papers awards from
the Society of Toxicology Risk Assessment Specialty Section. His previous research has won
the Society of Toxicology’s Outstanding Published Paper in Risk Assessment Award and the Society
for Risk Analysis Outstanding Risk Practitioner Award. In 2008, his solution to a challenge on
“Statistical Methods to Predict Clinical Response” won an InnoCentive Award.
Dr. Cox has taught many graduate and professional courses in risk analysis, decision analysis, and
advanced analytics. He has authored and co-authored over 200 journal articles and book chapters on
these fields. His most recent books are Quantitative Risk Analysis of Air Pollution Health Effects
(Springer 2021), Causal Analytics for Applied Risk Analysis (Springer, 2018), Breakthroughs in Decision Science and Risk Analysis (Wiley, 2015), Improving Risk Analysis (Springer, 2013), and
the Wiley Encyclopedia of Operations Research and Management Science (Wiley, 2011), which Dr. Cox co-edited. He has over a dozen U.S. patents on applications of artificial intelligence, signal
processing, statistics and operations research. His current research interests include computational
statistical methods for causal inference in public and occupational health risk analysis, AI/ML for
decision optimization under uncertainty, and learning in uncertain and changing environments.
mailto:[email protected]://www.cox-associates.com/http://attheforefront.ucdenver.edu/?p=2510https://yosemite.epa.gov/sab/sabpeople.nsf/webcommittees/CASAChttp://www.sra.org/news/cox-accepts-sra-flagship-journal-risk-analysis-editor-chief-positionhttps://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783030573577https://www.springer.com/us/book/9783319782409https://www.wiley.com/en-us/Breakthroughs+in+Decision+Science+and+Risk+Analysis-p-9781118217160https://www.wiley.com/en-us/Breakthroughs+in+Decision+Science+and+Risk+Analysis-p-9781118217160https://www.amazon.com/Improving-Analysis-International-Operations-Management/dp/1461460573
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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LOUIS ANTHONY COX, JR., PH.D
Cox Associates and MoirAI, 503 Franklin Street, Denver, Colorado, 80218
(303)-388-1778 (Phone); (303)-388-0609 (Fax); [email protected]
WORK HISTORY
1986 - Present President, Cox Associates. Cox Associates is an independent Denver-
based consulting company specializing in advanced analytics, public
and occupational risk analysis, epidemiology, data science and
statistics, artificial intelligence, risk analysis, management science,
and operations research for public- and private-sector clients. Cox
Associates develops and applies quantitative risk assessment,
machine learning, uncertainty analysis, decision optimization models
and artificial intelligence and computational statistics to
quantitatively assess health risks and to measurably improve client
decision-making. In 2013, Dr. Cox co-founded NextHealth
Technologies (NHT), a company offering advanced data analytics
solutions to healthcare plans to measurably reduce health, financial,
and member attrition risks and to improve member values and health
outcomes under the provisions of the Affordable Care Act.
1987 - 1996 Senior Director for U S West Advanced Technologies in Boulder,
Colorado. Built world-class management science and operations
research team, headed Business and Engineering Modeling,
Communications Services Research, and Network Architecture
divisions; secured corporate and external funding commitments for
$11M annual applied research budget; managed twelve director
areas and over 100 professional engineers and scientists in statistical
and econometric modeling, optoelectronics, network architectures
and technologies, network economics and performance analysis,
wireless architecture and engineering, network evolution, product
test and development, standards, international projects, digital signal
processing, network optimization, and breakthrough projects.
1980 - 1986 Manager, Applied Decision Sciences practice area; Senior Consultant
in Operations Research, Arthur D. Little, Inc., Cambridge, MA
1978 - 1979 Senior Research Associate, American Institutes for Research in the
Social and Behavioral Sciences (AIR), Washington, D.C. and
Cambridge, MA
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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Present and Past Academic Affiliations
Associate Professor of Business Analytics, University of Colorado, Denver
Visiting Scholar, The George Washington University Regulatory Studies Center
Clinical Professor, Biostatistics and Informatics, University of Colorado
Honorary Full Professor of Mathematics, University of Colorado at Denver (UCD)
Faculty, Center for Computational Biology, UCD
Adjunct Faculty member, Center for Computational Mathematics, UCD
Advisory Board, Center for Human Performance and Risk Analysis (CHPRA), University of Wisconsin at Madison
Clinical Professor, Preventive Medicine and Biometrics, University of Colorado
Instructor, Computer Science Department, University of Colorado at Denver. Taught courses on causal inference and computational statistical methods.
Faculty, Daniels School of Business, Denver University. Taught graduate courses on statistics.
Faculty, Leeds School of Business, University of Colorado at Boulder. Taught courses on decision analysis and statistical decision theory.
Faculty, HarvardUniversityExtensionSchool. Taught course on decision and risk analysis.
EDUCATION
1986 - Present Professional courses, seminars, and tutorials in data science, advanced
analytics, management science, operations research, computational
statistics, neuroeconomics, behavioral economics
1993 Stanford Executive Program, Stanford Business School
1985 - 1986 M.I.T., Ph.D. in Risk Analysis. Dissertation: Mathematical
Foundations of Risk Measurement
1983 - 1985 M.I.T., S.M. in Operations Research, Department of Electrical
Engineering and Computer Science. Thesis: Attribution of Risk in
the Presence of Joint Causes.
1979 - 1983 Harvard University, graduate courses in applied mathematics,
theoretical and applied statistics, psychometrics, and decision sciences
1975-1978 Harvard University, A.B. (Mathematical Economics)
http://regulatorystudies.columbian.gwu.edu/tony-cox
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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Selected Awards and Honors
2019: Fellow, Institute for Operations Research and Management Science (INFORMS) "for significant research, practice, and service contributions to homeland security, health and
environmental risk analysis, telecommunications, and the modeling of causality."
2018: Society for Risk Analysis Richard J. Burk, Jr. Outstanding Sevice Award “in recognition of exceptional contributions to the field of risk analysis.”
2018: NASA iTech Semifinalist “Analytic techniques to automate and predict large data sets.”
2018:Best Published Paper Demonstrating an Application of Risk Assessment, awarded by the Risk Assessment Specialty Section of the Society of Toxicology, March, 2018.
2015: Best Published Papers Demonstrating an Application of Risk Assessment: Top Five Papers award, awarded by the Risk Assessment Specialty Section of the Society of Toxicology,
March, 2015
2012: Inducted into the National Academy of Engineering “For applications of operations research and risk analysis to significant national problems.”
2011: Best Paper Award, Society for Risk Analysis, for A causal model of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) risk.http://www.sra.org/journal_best_paper_awards.php
2008: Innocentive Challenge Award. In 2008, Dr. Cox's proprietary solution to a challenge on “Statistical Methods to Predict Clinical Response” won an InnoCentive Award from Eli Lilly.
2007: Outstanding Practitioner Award, recognizing excellent performance in the practice of risk analysis. Awarded by the Society for Risk Analysis. San Antonio, TX, December, 2007.
2007: Outstanding Published Paper in 2006 Demonstrating an Application of Risk Assessment, awarded by the Risk Assessment Specialty Section of the Society of Toxicology, March, 2007.
2006: Franz Edelman Finalist Award, for achievement in the practice of Operations Research and the Management Sciences, Institute for Operations Research and Management Science
(INFORMS), 2006.
2006: Best Reviewer, Decision Sciences, for Risk Analysis: An International Journal.
2003: Best Paper Award, Society for Risk Analysis, 2003
2002: Best Paper Award, Society for Risk Analysis, 2002, www.sra.org/news0203.pdf
1995: POMS National Award Finalist for paper: Cox LA, Bell G, Glover F. A new learning approach to process improvement in a telecommunications company. Production and
Operations Management,4, 3, 217-227, 1995. Production and Operations Management Society
1994: INFORMS Prize, awarded to U S WEST forworld’s best real-world applications of operations research with substantial business value
1993: Lifetime Fellow of the Society for Risk Analysis http://www.sra.org/fellows-society
At U S WEST Dr. Cox also received many awards. Under his leadership, U S WEST won the
prestigious INFORMS Prize, awarded annually to the company in the world that has best applied
operations research methods in innovative ways that have had profound business impact. Dr. Cox
won the U S WEST's Chairman's Award and two Special Achievement Awards for innovations in
network design credited with saving U S WEST over $100M, and U S WEST's President's Club
and Circle of Excellence Awards for innovations in probabilistic analysis of customer choice.
https://connect.informs.org/communities/community-home/digestviewer/viewthread?MessageKey=1c7fbcc4-cfc5-49d4-864d-39c2e6b835af&CommunityKey=1d5653fa-85c8-46b3-8176-869b140e5e3c&tab=digestviewerhttps://www.nasa.gov/directorates/spacetech/itech/Top_25_Semifinalists_for_Innovative_Space_Tech_Ideas_2018https://www.toxicology.org/groups/ss/RASS/docs/RASS_Newsletter_Volume8_Issue1.pdffile:///C:/Users/Christine/Desktop/--D%20Drive--/•%09www8.nationalacademies.org/onpinews/newsitem.aspx%3fRecordID=02092012http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20846171http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20846171http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20846171http://www.innocentive.com/servlets/project/ProjectInfo.po?s=AWhttp://www.sra.org/news0203.pdfhttp://www.sra.org/fellows-society
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES
Selected Professional Societies
Society for Risk Analysis (SRA). Fellow since 1993. (Fellowship recognizes lifetime contributions to the field of risk analysis)
Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS), Edelman Laureate since 2006 (recognizing outstanding achievement in the practice of
OR/MS.) Fellow since 2019.
Member of the American Statistical Association since 1993.
Selected Positions Held
Editor-in-Chief, Risk Analysis: An International Journal. 2013-Present
Area Editor, Mathematical Modeling, Risk Analysis: An International Journal. 2008-2012
President, Rocky Mountain Chapter, Institute for Operations Research and Management Science (INFORMS) 2013-2014
Treasurer of the Society for Risk Analysis (SRA), 2007-8; Treasurer-Elect, 2006
Counselor for the 400-member ORSA Special Interest Group on Telecommunications, 1992
Member of the International Life Sciences Institute's (ILSI's) Risk Science Institute Cancer Dose-Response Working Group in 1991-1992.
Counselor, Rocky Mountain Chapter of the SRA, 1990-1991
Secretary and co-founder, New England Chapter of the SRA, 1985-86
https://www.informs.org/Community/Rocky-Mountain-Chapter
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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ACADEMIC EXPERIENCE
Graduate Courses Developed and Taught
Statistical Consulting, Department of Mathematics, University of Colorado at Denver (2017)
Decision Analysis, Business School, University of Colorado at Denver (2017)
Game Theory, Mathematics Department, University of Colorado at Denver
Health Risk Analysis, Health Sciences Center, University of Colorado
Causality, Inference, and Decision-Making, Computer Science Department, University of Colorado at Denver
Decision and Risk Analysis, Leeds School of Business, University of Colorado at Boulder
Statistics for Business,DenverUniversity Daniels GraduateSchool of Business
Social Decision and Risk Management,HarvardUniversityExtensionSchool
Selected Professional Courses Developed and Taught
Information and Causation for Health Risk Assessment. Professional Development Course. American Industrial Hygiene Conference & Exposition (AIHce). Seattle WA. June 4-7, 2017
Evaluating Causal Exposure-Response Relations in Epidemiological Data: Modernizing the Hill Considerations for Causality. Society for Epidemiologic Research (SER) Workshop at
SER 50th Anniversary Meeting. Seattle, WA. June 20-23, 2017
Causal Analytics for Benefit-Cost Analysts: What Effects do Policies Cause?Workshop at the Society for Benefit-Cost Analysis (SBCA) Annual Meeting. Washington, D.C. March 15-17,
2017
Advances in Health Risk Assessment and Modeling.Invited lectures presented at Risk Assessment Unit at Evira (Finnish Food Safety Authority) Helsinki. October 22-23, 2009.
Short Course on Causality and Decision Analysis for Risk Analysts. Australia&New Zealand Regional Organisation of the Society for Risk Analysis. 3
rd Annual Conference.Canberra,
Australia. September 29, 2008.
Probabilistic risk analysis: Assessment, management, and communication.HarvardCenter for Risk Analysis. Boston, MA. 2000-2004. Lectures on developing valid probability models
from data, subjectivity in data analysis; Bayesian inference in multivariate data sets and
causal modeling and influence diagrams for risk analysis.
Gordon-Kenan Risk Analysis Summer School in Risk Analysis August 3-15, 2003 Roger Williams University Bristol, RI www.grc.uri.edu/programs/2003/risk.htm
Probabilistic risk analysis. Professional course for Health Canada. Ottawa, Ontario. March 25
th-28
th, 2002. Lectured on “Using epidemiological data in risk assessment” and on “Causal
graphs, Bayesian belief networks, and influence diagrams: A framework for risk assessment
and risk management”.
Advanced Methods for Dose-Response Assessment: Bayesian Approaches. Resources for the FutureConferenceCenter, Washington, D.C. September 18
th-20
th, 2000
http://www.rff.org/disc_papers/PDF_files/0115.pdf.
"Bayesian methods for assessing uncertain exposures", Workshop on Probabilistic Methods for Risk Assessment. Society for Risk Analysis, Phoenix, AZ, 12-06-98.
Introduction to Decision Analysis for Risk Management, United States Department of Agriculture's APHIS Introductory Risk Analysis course, University of Maryland Conference
Center, July 9, 1992.
Risk Assessment Modeling, one-day short course given at the USDA Training Center, APHIS Risk Assessment Course, Fort Collins, CO, July 23-24, 1992.
file:///C:/Users/Tony/Desktop/Lexar/•%09hwww.aiha.org/events/AIHce2017/Documents/PDC%20Handouts%202017/PDC%20604%20Handout.pdfhttps://epiresearch.org/annual-meeting/archives-2/50th-anniversary/2017-workshop/https://epiresearch.org/annual-meeting/archives-2/50th-anniversary/2017-workshop/https://benefitcostanalysis.org/sbca-2017-workshop-offeringshttp://www.grc.uri.edu/programs/2003/risk.htmhttp://www.grc.uri.edu/programs/2003/risk.htmhttp://www.rff.org/disc_papers/PDF_files/0115.pdf
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Science Enrichment Courses Developed and Taught for Elementary School Children
Ricks Center for Gifted Children at the University of Denver (www.du.edu/ricks/)
Natural and Artificial Life, Evolution, and Intelligence (Spring, 2010)
Introduction to Cosmology and Earth Science (Spring, 2010)
Matter, Energy, and Technology (Spring, 2009)
Introduction to Materials Science (Spring, 2009)
Basic Cell Biology (Fall, 2008)
Dissertations Supervised
Dr. Cox has served on S.M. and Ph.D. thesis committees at the University of Denver (S.M.
thesis on genetic algorithms) and the University of Colorado (Ph.D. thesis on classification
trees for learning forecasting models from data; MS thesis on ant colony optimization; MS
project on data mining and causal simulation modeling; Ph.D. thesis on uncertainty analysis
in epidemiology)
Research Collaborations
At U S WEST Advanced Technologies, Dr. Cox initiated and led collaborative research
projects with top researchers at many universities, including
Harvard University (projects on combinatorial optimization and on interactive mixed natural language and graphics dialogue interfaces, with Professor Barbara Grosz)
Columbia University (dynamic traffic routing with Professor David Yao)
Syracuse University (machine comprehension of scientific abstracts)
Oregon Graduate Institute (breakthroughs in neural net and digital signal processing technologies for automated speech recognition with Professor Ron Cole).
His collaboration with mathematicians at the University of Colorado at Denver on
combinatorial optimization heuristics for network routing was selected by the Colorado
Advanced Software Institute (CASI) as one of only two projects (out of 30) that
exemplified this state-funded Institute's major goals: outstanding industry-university
technical research with high commercial value. His collaborations with UCD on new
data mining algorithms and pattern recognition techniques for risk analysis and fault
diagnosis algorithms were the only projects to receive CASI's award. Dr. Cox also
collaborated with colleagues at Bell Labs and the University of California on
fundamental research in multistate stochastic transition models and biomathematical
modeling.
http://www.du.edu/ricks/
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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Other Academic Experience
Dr. Cox served on the Industry Advisory Board of the Mathematics Department at the
University of Colorado at Denver, where he was subsequently Honorary Full Professor of
Mathematics and on the Faculty of the Center for Computational Mathematics. He has given
invited talks on advanced topics in epidemiology, occupational health and safety, public
health risks, risk analysis, data science, and computer science to faculties and graduate
seminars at many top universities. He is Editor-in-Chief of Risk Analysis: An International
Journal and is Area Editor (Real-World Applications) of the Journal of Heuristics, which he
helped to found in 1995.He is on the Editorial Board of the International Journal of
Operations Research and Information Systems. He has reviewed many academic research
proposals for the National Science Foundation's Decision, Risk, and Management Science
program and SBIR technology proposals for NSF and other agencies. He has lectured on
data mining, and other statistical, mathematical, and analytics topics at the University of
Colorado. Dr. Cox has also taught many professional courses and professional workshops.
Conference Sessions Chaired
Dr. Cox has chaired many conference sessions, including the following:
Foundational Issues in Risk Analysis, Part 2 - Uncertainty and Risk Conceptualizations. Society for Risk Analysis 2019 Annual Meeting. Arlington, VA.
Symposium: Risk Analysis: Past, Present, and Future. Society for Risk Analysis 2013 Annual Meeting. Baltimore, MD.
Symposium: Foundational Issues in Risk Analysis(with Terje Aven). Society for Risk Analysis 2013 Annual Meeting. Baltimore, MD.
Ambient Air: Particulate Matter Exposure. Society for Risk Analysis 2012 Annual Meeting. San Francisco. December 12, 2012.
Novel Approaches in Dose Response. Society for Risk Analysis 2010 Annual Meeting. Salt Lake City. December 7, 2010.
Sustainable Value Chains. Institute for Operations Research and Management Science annual conference, Austin, TX, 2010.
Animal Pathogens and Human Exposure. Society for Risk Analysis annual conference, San Antonio, TX, 2007. (Substituted for Dr. Michael McElvaine as chair.)
Assessment. Society for Risk Analysis annual conference, San Antonio, TX, 2007.
Complexity in Modeling Mode-of-Action and Other Sources of Non-Linearity In Risk. Society for Risk Analysis annual conference, Baltimore, MD December, 2006.
Statistical Methods: Uncertainty, Confidence Limits, etc.Society for Risk Analysis annual conference, Palm Springs, December 5-8, 2004.
Toxicology. Session at Non-Linear Dose-Response Relationships in Biology, Toxicology, and Medicine: An International Conference. (University of Massachusetts, Amherst,
MA, May 28-30th
, 2003)
Special Applications in Industry and Government. (Society for Risk Analysis, 2002)
Stochastic Optimization (Society for Industrial and Applied Mathematics, SIAM, 1996)
Cluster chair for INFORMS sessions on "Heuristic Optimization and Learning" (1994).
http://birenheide.com/sra/2013AM/program/singlesession.php3?sessid=T5-Chttp://birenheide.com/sra/2013AM/program/singlesession.php3?sessid=M3-C&order=2#2http://birenheide.com/sra/2012AM/program/singlesession.php3?sessid=W3-Khttp://meetings2.informs.org/Conf/Austin2010/images/split%20pdfs/tracks/Austin%20Service%20Science%20Sections.pdf
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CONSULTING EXPERIENCE
Examples of consulting projects completed by Dr. Cox include the following:
DATA MINING AND STATISTICAL MODELING AND PREDICTIVE ANALYTICS EXPERIENCE
For the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), provided statistical consulting on effects of slaughter establishment line speeds on microbial quality (2018-2020)
Created predictive analytics models for hypertension and cardiovascular risks based on blood lead levels and other individual-level predictors (2019)
For an animal antibiotic manufacturer, assessed public health consequences of animal antibiotic use in China and the US (2018-2019)
For European petroleum companies, analyzed data from Chinese factory workers to determine how well concentrations of benzene in air predict levels of urinary benzene metabolites (2018-2020)
For health insurance back office operations giant TriZetto, assessed healthcare predictive analytics trends and vendor offerings, advised top management on predictive analytics technology acquisitions (2012)
For Rogers Communications, developed causal models of customer satisfaction; identified high-impact interventions for improving customer satisfaction; helped to develop achievable targets and strategies for
improving customer experiences in different channels (2011)
Delivered a statistical analysis of the causal drivers of customer satisfaction to top executives at Comcast Cable; identified realistic targets and interventions for improving customer satisfaction (2010-11).
For a top cable company, worked in partnership with North Highland consulting company to deliver a predictive model that identifies which customers are most likely to drop accounts, well before the event
and with much higher accuracy than previous models. (2008)
For an energy utility, worked in partnership with North Highland consulting company to deliver a predictive model of customer bad debt and account write-offs that greatly extended the lead time over
which high-risk customers could be identified and targeted for intervention. (2007)
For a telecommunications company, worked in partnership with North Highland consulting company to develop a predictive model of customer marketing channel choice, and usage as a function of quanlity of
channel experience (e.g., for web site, call center, retail store, and other channels.) Used the model to
quantify financial impacts of improving web-based customer care. (2006)
Also in partnership with North Highland consulting company, analyzed employee survey data for a major telecommunications provider and quantified patterns of internal communications (conference calls,
managing e-mail, company news letters and bulletins, meetings, etc.); time spent on these activities by
employees with different job roles and in different VP areas; and potential to reduce employee burden and
improve the value and efficiency of internal communications. (2006)
For a European wireless telecommunications provider, analyzed customer data to help develop more predictive segments; held a one-day intensive course in Brussels on advanced statistical models and
methods for quantifying customer value in the short and long runs, based on probability and statistics
models of customer behaviors in response to company offers. (2005)
Delivered to an international telecommunications company a needs-based predictive segmentation model for cell phone customers.
In partnership with North Highland consulting company, delivered to a directory company a credit scoring and data mining model for identifying customers at greatest risk of defaulting on Yellow Pages
agreements.
Delivered to an internet services provider (ISP) a decision-support model for predicting customers with the highest churn potential and recommending specific interventions to reduce churn. This system was found
by the client to reduce churn by over 40% within 4 months among at-risk customers.
Delivered to a financial services company a set of predictive clusters for simultaneously predicting churn, upsell, and cross-sell potentials for existing customers. The predictive validity, stability, and high practical
value of the predictive clusters were confirmed by the client in 2003 and 2004.
Completed a study to identify ways to predict which competitive local exchange carrier (CLEC) customers would experience the most revenue growth in the next quarter and which would be most likely to drop
accounts.
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Completed an analysis of insurance customer data showing that combining information from homeowner, auto, and other insurance lines using classification trees and transition models could dramatically improve
accurate identification of cross-sell, up-sell, and retention opportunities.
Completed a study of purchasing patterns among large business customers for Qwest communications. The results show that a few key products, together with factors such as account age, predict likely stability or
churn of customers, as well as likely growth potential.
Delivered to statistical analyses of the effects of U S WEST and competitor advertising and publicity (including brand/service commercials, direct mail, and news stories) on customer ratings of value and
loyalty.
Analyzed marketing data for AT&T-TCI to determine which current cable customers are most likely to switch to digital cable in the next quarter, based on current cable, telephony, and demographic risk factors.
Created and validated a statistical (semi-Markov state transition) risk model to predict product and account attrition among U S WEST customers. Delivered to the CRMS group in U S WEST Communications a
predictive model for identifying the likely future purchasing, product-drop, and account disconnect
behaviors of individual customers. The new model has significantly greater predictive power than previous
ones, achieving lifts of several hundred percent on the task of predicting which 10% of customers are most
likely to buy specific products in the next few months.
Developed new statistical optimal matching procedures to decide which products to offer which customers to maximize average revenue yield and lifetime revenue value for U S WEST Communications.
Demonstrated a potential increase of over 40% for short-term revenues. 15% revenue increase was
achieved in a preliminary in-market trial of intelligent scripting.
Used a new causal modeling and data-mining technique to predict likely future product purchases from past purchase data and demographics, for U S WEST Consumer Services Group.
Created a new forecasting model for application to short-tem and cross-sectional market data. The new method combined classification tree analysis with compartmental flow simulation. Applied to real data, it
successfully allowed growth in demand for access lines to be predicted as accurately using less than 6
months of data as was previously possible using over 5 years of data with conventional time series
forecasting methods. The forecasts were used by U S WEST Communications in 1997.
Created and implemented a combined machine-learning/transition simulation forecasting technique to use detailed call records to more accurately predict traffic loads arriving at different locations within a wireless
network for PrimeCo Personal Communications Services Ltd.
Developed a simulation-based model of cable customer transitions among different behaviors (adding and dropping basic and enhanced cable services, switching among services and locations, etc.) for TCI.
Analyzed cable franchise data for over 400 TCI cable systems to identify predictors of service quality perceptions and churn. Successfully identified unexpected demographic predictors of profitability and
satisfaction.
Analyzed macroeconomic data and survey data for a consortium of Indonesian companies to predict the penetration of telephony, PCs, internet services, and cable over the next 15 years.
RISK ANALYSIS, ECONOMICS, AND APPLIED STATISTICS CONSULTING EXPERIENCE
For the George Washington University Regulatory Studies Center, reviewed advances in machine learning methods for learning to behave effectively in uncertain and changing environments
For the George Washington University Regulatory Studies Center, developed models of threshold exposure-response relationships involving activation of inflammasomes
For the National Sand and Gravel Association, developed biomathematical models of chronic inflammation-mediated lung diseases and exposure-response functions for asbestos and crystalline silica.
For the American Chemistry Council, quantified how well in vivo test results for rodent carcinogens could be predicted from much less expensive high-throughput in vitro test results. (This work won the Best
Published Paper in 2017 Demonstrating an Application of Risk Assessment Award from the Society of
Toxicology, March, 2018)
For the American Chemistry Council, applied machine-learning algorithms to quantify how well in vivo test results for endocrine disruptors could be predicted from much less expensive high-throughput in vitro
test results.
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For the George Washington University Regulatory Studies Center, reviewed advances in econometric and statistical methods for causal analysis. Applied Granger Causality tests, panel data analysis, and other
methods to time series data, and found that changes in temperature, but not changes in particulate matter,
are Granger-causes of benefits previously attributed to Clean Air Act regulations.
For the National Sand and Gravel Association, analyzed spatial distributions of socioeconomic variables and cause-specific mortality rates in California. Demonstrated that regression coefficients describing
disease rates as functions of proximity to suspected hazardous sources do not have the causal
interpretations ofte assigned to them, but reflect spurious associations due to spatially autocorrelated but
statistically independent spatial stochastic processes.
For the National Pork Board, prepared comments on a Russian risk analysis of tetracycline residues in foods. These comments provided the technical basis for the USG’s position in trilateral trade negotiations
with the EU and Russian Federation
For The Center for Media and Public Affairs (CMPA) at George Mason University, reassessed a risk-cost-benefit analysis of Clean Air Act Amendment impacts, accounting for uncertainty about causation. (2011)
For the Amerian Petroleum Institute, analyzed the application of income distribution equity indices (such as the Atkins Index) to fair distribution of air pollution health risks. Showed that the Atkins Index and
related economic indices of income inequality are not useful for health risk inequality assessment (2011)
For the Institute of Medicine (IOM), served as a reviewer for the IOM Draft onScientific Standards for Studies of Modified Risk Tobacco Products, examining the types of biomarker data and other scientific
information needed to demonstrate to FDA that new products have reduced risks (2011)
Served as expert reviewer for EPA’s Draft Microbial Risk Assessment Guideline: Pathogenic Microorganisms with Focus on Food and Water
For the U.S. EPA, served as a member of the Science Advisory Board (SAB) for Dioxin (2010-11)
For the Colorado state police, analyzed the frequency and severity of car accidents by time of day, time of year, driver age and sex, driver behavior (e.g., alcohol use, use of safety devices), and types of air bags and
oher equipment. Developed an injury prediction model that successfully predicted risks of injury, given an
accident, from less than 20% to over 70%, based on preventable causes.
For the National Mining Association, developed a statistical critique of a proposed quantitative risk assessment for respirable coal mine dust
For the American Chemistry Council’s Crystalline Silica Panel, modeled exposure-response relationships for inflammation-mediated lung diseases and lung cancer risk caused by exposure to quartz dust and
crystalline silica. Presented key results and references to Canadian regulators in August, 2010. Health
Canada subsequently proposed to regulate crystalline silica as a threshold carcinogen, breaking new
ground in science-based regulatory risk analysis for this compound.
For the National Pork Board, assessed human health risks of multidrug-resistant “superbug” bacterial infections originating from pigs
For Philip Morris International, developed a quantitative model of age-specific risks of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) as a function of smoking history (2008-2009). Clarified the interaction of
molecular biological pathways in forming positive feedback loops that trigger and sustain this disease.
For the National Pork Board, reviewed statistical and causal analyses of infant mortality and livestock production
For the American Chemistry Council’s Crystalline Silica Panel, critically reviewed draft regulatory risk assessments of crystalline silica as a toxic substance and possible lung carcinogen (2009)
For Alpharma and Phibro Animal Health, assessed potential human health risks from use of tetracycline drugs in food animals
Member of National Academy of Sciences (NAS) Committee on Methodological Improvements to the Department of Homeland Security’s Biological Agent Risk Analysis. (2006-
8)http://www8.nationalacademies.org/cp/CommitteeView.aspx?key=48682
Member of Environmental Protection Agency Science Advisory Board (EPA SAB) on Asbestos.http://yosemite.epa.gov/sab/sabpeople.nsf/WebCommitteesSubcommittees/Asbestos%20Commit
tee
Member of Institute of Medicine’s (IOM) Committee on Aerospace Medicine and the Medicine of Extreme Environments (2006-8), Committee to Review NASA’s Space Flight Health Standards
For Comcast Cable, worked in partnership with North Highland consulting company to develop a customer churn predictive risk assessment model that successfully predicts which customers are most likely to drop
http://www8.nationalacademies.org/cp/CommitteeView.aspx?key=48682http://yosemite.epa.gov/sab/sabpeople.nsf/WebCommitteesSubcommittees/Asbestos%20Committeehttp://yosemite.epa.gov/sab/sabpeople.nsf/WebCommitteesSubcommittees/Asbestos%20Committee
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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services and accounts – months before the drops occur, while there is still time to intervene. The model
was statistically compared to existing commercial predictive models and found to be more than twice as
effective in identifying high-risk customers early on.
Delegate to First Session of the Codex Ad Hoc Intergovernmental Task Force on Antimicrobial Resistanceheld in Seoul, Republic of Korea, 23-26 October 2007.
For Xcel Energy, worked in partnership with North Highland consulting company to develop a credit risk assessment model that predicts which customer accounts are likely to become bad debts six months or
more in advance, when early intervention is still possible and profitable (2007)
For Qwest Communications, worked in partnership with North Highland consulting company to analyze the amounts of time that employees spend managing internal communications (e-mails, meetings,
conference calls, etc.) and identifying opportunities to improve internal communications efficiency (2006).
For Philip Morris International, developed a quantitative model of age-specific risks of lung cancer as a function of smoking history. Estimated the potential reduction in lung cancer risk for smokers if cadmium
were removed from tobacco products. (2005-2007)
For Qwest Communications, worked in partnership with North Highland consulting company to quantify customer interest in and willingness to use improved web portals to manage telecommunications services
(2006-7).
For a sand and gravel company, examined the usefulness, for estimating risks and setting prioriries, of aggregate exposure metrics for mixtures of asbestos and non-asbestos fibers and particles (2006)
For a telecommunications equipment manufacturer, created a model to predict the numbers and types of equipment failures expected in future years, based on historical failure data for equipment items
manufactured in different years. (2006)
For a grass seed company, assessed the quantitative risks of gene flow from genetically modified grasses into the environment via pollen and seeds (2006). This approach was subsequently adopted by the United
States District Court for the District of Columbia as a basis for risk calculations
(http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/pubs/GTBC_Doc_94_Opinion%202-5-07.pdf)
For a homeowner’s association, quantified the probable number and timing of future failures in copper pipes due to thermogalvanic corrosion. The model correctly predicted the near statistical certainty of
additional pipe failures (2006).
For the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), advised on modeling potential failures and threats to spent nuclear fuel rods stored in different types of containers. This work
contributed to the 2006 NAS report Safety and Security of Commercial Spent Nuclear Fuel Storage,
http://www.nap.edu/openbook/0309096472/html/R4.html.
For a large pharmaceutical company, analyzed Phase 3 clinical trial data and showed that a major drug is highly effective in reversing symptoms of a disease in patients in both the short run (within 1-2 weeks) and
over a longer time frame. This statistical analysis of the time course of responses and the clusters of
different response histories among patients explained several previously unresolved puzzles and made the
meaning of the data clear for company statisticians and decision-makers. (2005)
For a law firm specializing in construction defect litigation, developed an approach to sampling available homes or units to support efficient statistical inference from available data, even when some homes or
units cannot be inspected. (2005)
For Phibro Animal Health, developed a systems dynamics model of the evolution of bacterial illnesses and resistance in human and animal populations. (2005/2006)
For the American Chemistry Council, assessed the potential human health risks associated with methyl bromide (2005).
For Philip Morris Intenational, developed new ways to integrate partial knowledge of causal mechanisms of lung carcinogenesis with statistical information (mainly epidemiological and molecular epidemiological
data) to obtain quantitative bounds on the fraction of lung cancers that can be prevented by removing
specific components of exposure and/or blocking specific causal pathways. (2004-2006)
For the cattle industry group R-CALF, developed a value of information (VOI) model for assessing the economic value of tracking Canadian cattle in the US in light of recent BSE findings (2004).
For the Animal Health Institute, developed a Rapid Risk Rating Technique (RRRT) to quantify the human health impacts of food-borne pathogens and animal antimicrobial uses (1Q-04)
For Elanco Animal Health, served on an Expert Panel to develop a mathematical model of the human health benefits of decreasing microbial loads in food animals (2003-4)
http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/pubs/GTBC_Doc_94_Opinion%202-5-07.pdfhttp://www.nap.edu/openbook/0309096472/html/R4.html
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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For Phibro Animal Health, developed a quantitative risk assessment of the human health risks and benefits from continued use of virginiamycin in chickens and pigs (2002-4)
For the Animal Health Institute, served on an Expert Panel to review human health risks from animal antibiotics (2002-3); developed a farm-to-fork risk simulation model for Campylobacter risks (2000-2002)
For the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, served as an external expert reviewer for the EPA’s “Perchlorate Environmental Contamination: Toxicological Review and Risk Characterization” Draft
External Review Document (March, 2002).
For the World Health Organization (WHO), served as an external expert reviewer for a Consultation on Campylobacter risk assessment, in Geneva (August, 2001)
For the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), (a) Reviewed proposed approaches to antimicrobial risk assessment (1999) http://www.fda.gov/cvm/antimicrobial/tonycox/index.htm; and (b) Proposed a
decision-analytic alternative to FDA’s threshold approach for managing risks of resistant strains of
pathogenic bacteria due to use of antibiotics in animals (2001). The FDA at first strongly rejected Dr.
Cox’s advice and testimony on how to do antimicrobial risk assessment correctly (with considerable
acrimony, in the context of enrofloxacin litigation), but has subsequently had Dr. Cox visit to discuss
several antimicrobial risk assessments, and has sought Dr. Cox’s views on how to do better risk analysis.
For the U.S. EPA, served as expert external reviewer and contributor to Review of Uncertainty and Variability Analysis In IRIS for Eight Substances.http://www.epa.gov/ncea/hlthfx_iris.htm
Created computer simulation models (PBPK and PD) of dose-time-response relations for low-level exposures to chemical carcinogens, for Exxon Biomedical Sciences (EBSI). Developed an artificial
intelligence method for improving prediction of likely human chemical carcinogens, also for EBSI.
Created a discrete-event stochastic simulation model of the human health risks associated with Ciprofloxacin resistance in Camplyobacterjejuni induced by use of Enrofloxacin in chickens, for the
Animal Health Institute (AHI). http://www.cvmbs.colostate.edu/cveadss/schedule/SchedulePage.htm
Critically reviewed epidemiological studies of diesel exhaust and human lung cancer risk, for the Engine Manufacturers Association.
For the American Petroleum Institute (API), created a computer simulation model of bone marrow and blood cell toxicity caused by cyclophosphamide, an immunosuppressive drug. Designed laboratory
experiments to validate the model's predictions. Analyzed clinical and laboratory data to test model's
predictive validity. Prepared a software release so that other scientists could use the model.
Reviewed literature on air pollution and human lung cancer risks, for the American Petroleum Institute.
Applied adaptive spatial sampling to optimize search and clean-up efforts for remediating residential properties around an abandoned hazardous waste site (for AlliedSignal)
Reassessed human cancer risks from 1,3-butadiene using pharmacokinetic modeling to adjust for interspecies differences in internal doses of epoxybutene (for the Chemical Manufacturers Association)
Reassessed the human leukemia risks from benzene exposure using a physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model to calculate internal dose (for the American Petroleum Association)
Reviewed design of an initiation-promotion experiment for studying the potential carcinogenicity of a rubber additive, for Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company.
Developed a general physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) modeling software tool for rapidly developing high-quality PBPK models (with ENSR Consulting and Engineering, Inc.)
Reviewed artificial intelligence approaches to characterizing uncertain health risks using weight of evidence, nonmonotonic, and other uncertainty analysis (for Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
Assessed potential health risks associated with occupational exposure to herbicides among roadside workers, using pharmacokinetic models, for a Fortune 100 chemical manufacturer.
Recommendation of cleanup priorities for a large hazardous waste site in Canada
Developed a prototype computer model for biologically based risk assessment of chemical carcinogen risks, for the Western States Petroleum Association (WSPA) and the American Petroleum Institute (API)
Reviewed new biostatistical and "biologically based" approaches to cancer risk analysis, for the California Department of Health Services
Reviewed regulatory history of benzene risk assessments and of biomathematical approaches to modeling leukemogenesis for the Western Oil and Gas Association and the American Petroleum Institute
Prototype computer modeling of the AIDS epidemic (with Arthur D. Little, Inc.)
http://www.fda.gov/cvm/antimicrobial/tonycox/index.htmhttp://www.epa.gov/ncea/hlthfx_iris.htmhttp://www.cvmbs.colostate.edu/cveadss/schedule/SchedulePage.htm
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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Designed a 2-year bioassay experiment for isoprene. Analyzed and reported the resulting experimental data for a multi-client, multinational industry group coordinated by Exxon Biomedical Sciences.
Accident risk analysis and consequence analysis of a petrochemical storage facility in California, for a California-based environmental consulting firm
Implemented a Macintosh version of a physiologically-based pharmacokinetic (PBPK) model for benzene pharmacokinetics and total metabolism in rodents and humans, for the API
Explored new mathematical approaches and conceptual frameworks for dealing with scientific uncertainties in biologically-based risk assessment, for the Western States Petroleum Association (WSPA)
Created an interactive data analysis and graphics package for determining the degree of worker protection provided by different respirators, filters, and face masks (with Arthur D. Little, Inc.)
Microeconomic and applied probability modeling of insurance company business risks for use in tax litigation (with Arthur D. Little, Inc.)
Critically reviewed a transportation risk analysis for liquefied natural gas (LNG) operations in the St. Lawrence seaway.
Reviewed progress since 1985 in using decision analysis for accident risk assessments.
Implemented an experimental "intelligent" data base management system for chemical health effects data bases (with Exxon Biomedical Sciences, Inc.)
Uncertainty analysis of PBPK modeling and risk analyses, accounting for model uncertainties and population heterogeneity, for the American Industrial Health Council.
Developed new statistical techniques to predict cancer risks associated with mineral oils, for Mobil Oil.
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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CONSTRUCTION DEFECT LITIGATION SUPPORT EXPERIENCE
Dr. Cox has testified as an expert statistician in numerous construction defect cases, typically seeking to clarify
the types of valid statistical inferences about risks and defects that can be drawn from limited sample data. Dr.
Cox has been deposed on statistical issues in the following construction defect cases since 2012.
Note: Arizona cases have generally been in Maricpoa County.
Acevado v. LGI Homes (Magma Ranch) in Arizona, telephone deposition 12-19-17
Abbott v. Western Pacific Housing Costa Mesa, California, telephone deposition 8/3/2015
Age vs. DR Horton, telephone deposition 4/9/2015
Attias vs D.R. Horton Los Angeles Holding. Depostion in Costa Mesa, California. 12/08/2016
Beazer v. DeLaurentis. Deposition in Phoenix, Arizona. 9/27/2015
Clark vs. WCHB (Mira Vista) Deposition 8/2/2013
Eagar, et al. v. TM Homes of Arizona, Inc., et al. Deposition, Phoenix, Arizona. Telephone deposition. October 2, 2017.
Fireside at NorterraTripliex Condos v. Pulte Home Corporation. Telephone deposition, Phoenix, Arizona. 11/18/2016
Guardian Storage. Mediation presentation. Phoenix, Arizona. 02/03/2017
Hobbs vs. Elliott Deposition in Sacramento, CA, 4/1/2013
Hudley v. Seeno Homes. Deposition in California, 2/17/2016
Levinson v. Del Webb testified before arbitration panel in Phoenix, Arizona, 2/5/2013
Montage Deposition in Phoenix, Arizona, 8/20/2013
Nishimura vs. Gentry Homes. Testified before arbiter. Honolulu, Hawaii. 4/6/2017
Stark (Hoag) v. Taylor Morrison (Villago; Casa Grande, AZ). Testified before arbiter. Phoenix, Arizona. 05/10/2017
Santan Crossing Professional Plaza Condominium Association v. Reliance Build, Inc. et al. Testified at evidentiary hearing and jury trial in Arizona, 9/2018. Case No. CV2015-091851
Sun City Festival Deposition, Phoenix, Arizona, telephone deposition, 6/21/2016 (Albert et al. v. Pulte Development Corp., Case No. 01-15-0002-8405, Eric Berg, Esq., Arbitrator)
Third Street Lofts Deposition in San Francisco, 2/26/2013
Dr. Cox has also been deposed on statistical issues in the following additional construction defect cases
since 2006.
Aberle v. Brookfield Homes Deposition in Costa Mesa, California, 12/4/2012
Amezcua/Pua v. DR Horton Deposition in Arizona, 2/2/2010
Amukamara/Larissa by Forecast Deposition in Arizona, 4/10/2007
Arrants v. D.R. Horton Deposition in Arizona, 8/3/2010
Aspen Creek Deposition in Arizona, 5/22/07
D.R. Horton, Inc.-Denver vs. Canyon Creek Condominium Association, Inc. Deposition in Colorado, 12/10/2010
Centercrest Deposition in Arizona, 3/14/2006
Chaignot v. Beazer Deposition in Arizona, 4/22/2010
Cummings v. LenarDeposition in Arizona, 9/21/2006
Dancy Deposition in Arizona, 11/09/2006
Ensley et al. vs. Forecast Homes Deposition and trial in Arizona, 11/09/2009
Frye Park Townhomes HOA v. Patterson Development LP Deposition in Arizona, 4/22/2010
Goree v. Monterey Homes Deposition in Arizona, 11/30/2006
Greenwood Estates Deposition in Arizona, 10/11/2010
Kerby Estates testified in arbitraton in Phoenix, Arizona 8/16/12, 8/17/12, and 8/13/12
Landmark Towers Deposition in Arizona, 7/29/11
Levinson v. Del Webb testified to arbitration panel in Phoenix, Arizona, 2/5/2013
Magic Ranch by Richmond America Deposition in Denver, Colorado,12-13-11
Paloma Paseo Deposition in Arizona, 10/13/2007
Premier Deposition in Arizona, 3/10/2009
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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Raintree Deposition in Arizona, 8/3/2007
Richards vs. Del Webb; see Levinson v. Del Webb
Sun City Grand testified to arbitration panel in Phoenix, Arizona, 7/22/2011
TerravitaDeposition in Arizona, 10/6/2006
Windrose East Deposition in Arizona, 3/10/2009
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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TELECOMMUNICATIONS NETWORK DESIGN AND OPTIMIZATION EXPERIENCE
After leaving U S WEST Advanced Technologies, Dr. Cox has led the following projects.
Development and delivery of packet data and wireless network planning software tools to support design, capacity planning, routing, and restoration of traffic in robust, resilient networks (2012-2014)
Development and delivery of SONET-DWDM ring and mesh network planning software tools that allow for unspecified (any-to-any) demands and incremental planning with ring, mesh, or hybrid protection and
resilience against multiple simultaneous fiber cuts or other failures (2005-2013).
Led delivery of a hybrid ring/mesh architecture network planning software tool to Sprint (2004)
Led delivery of a combined SONET-DWDM mesh topology design tool to Tellabs, Inc. (2003)
Developed network planning, optimization, and risk analysis tools for a satellite company (2002)
Created a competitive cost model for Sprint’s national optical network (2002)
Delivered a Passive Optical Network (PON) configurator tool to a PON equipment vendor (2002)
Delivered to Sprint a port-level SONET ring planning tool. An initial version of the tool was successfully used in creating Sprint’s 2002 network build plan (2001)
Delivered to Redback Networks of a card-level SONET ring planning and optimization tool (2001). This software tool is now marketed commercially by Redback Networks.
Delivered to Sprint a dark fiber network configuration planning tool, incorporating a proprietary genetic algorithm, that reduced costs of metro-area networks by over 50% compared to manual solutions. (2001 for
fiber-only version and wireless link options)
Delivered to Tellium a Dense Wave Division Multiplexing (DWDM) mesh topology design tool, marketed commercially as StarNet Planner. (2000)
Delivered to Kestrel Solutions a SONET Ring Planning tool for optimizing placement of optical add-drop multiplexer components in optical ring networks. (2000)
Created a new design for a backhaul network in Colorado that saved AT&T Wireless over 20% on their monthly backhaul charges. The new design, based on large-scale integer programming optimization, re-
assigned traffic to hubs and recommended adding two new hubs to reduce system costs. (1999)
For Sprint PCS, analyzed market demand forecasts and switching and interconnect costs. Led development of a a 20-period network growth and capacity planning and optimization software model. Identified a way
to save over $1M (approximately 10%) of network capital expenses for a small city by reconfiguring the
initial choice of switch modules to allow a more efficient capacity expansion growth path (1997).
For Cox California PCS, led development of a backhaul network optimization program, solved via a new genetic algorithm, that reduced monthly backhaul costs by over 10% through more efficient of digital
circuits to hubs and more economical use of SONET facilities.
For PrimeCo Personal Communications Services, Ltd., created an optimization model of Multi-Channel Controller Card assignment and inventory management to reduce the costs of expanding network capacity
through base station capacity upgrades.
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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PREVIOUS INDUSTRY EXPERIENCE
Before starting Cox Associates in 1986, Dr. Cox consulted in statistics, health and safety risk
analysis, operations research, computer science, and econometrics for Arthur D. Little, Inc. He
managed multimillion dollar AI risk analysis software development projects for the U S Air Force
and led cases covering environmental fate and transport modeling of pollutants, risk analyses for
transportation and processing facilities, reliability modeling of complex systems, and a variety of
occupational health risk assessment, industrial hygiene, and epidemiology cases. He also served as
an expert statistician and economist in support of several contract, tort, and administrative law cases
and contributed to projects on USDA Standards and Grades for food products, statistical analysis of
cigarette smoking data, safety of different types of protective masks, etc.
In 1984, Dr. Cox won Arthur D. Little's Presidential Award for outstanding contributions to the
development of R&D planning and risk assessment methodologies for the Electric Power Research
Institute (EPRI).
Prior to joining Arthur D. Little, Dr. Cox worked in societal risk analysis, risk analysis of chronic
delinquency, experimental cognitive psychology of text processing, and applied statistics, at the
American Institutes for Research (AIR). He co-authored a widely cited book on the effects of court
sanctions on risks of chronic delinquent behavior, featured on Good Morning America (e.g.,
www.theatlantic.com/politics/crime/wilson.htm).
OTHER TECHNOLOGY EXPERTISE
Dr. Cox has testified as an expert in occupational and public health and safety risk analysis before the
Mining Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) on health risks from respirable coal dust (2011);
before the Subcommittee on Energy and Power of the House Energy and Commerce Committee of
Congress on health effects of air pollutants (2012); before the U. S. House Science Committee
Subcommittee on Environment on Ensuring Open Science at EPA (February, 2014); before the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) on crystalline silica risks (March, 2014);
and before the House Subcommittee on Energy and Power and the Subcommittee on Commerce,
Manufacturing, and Trade, on public health effects of ozone (June, 2015).
Dr. Cox was U S WEST Advanced Technologies' technical expert on statistics and econometrics,
artificial intelligence, decision and risk analysis, and digital signal processing technologies,
emphasizing pattern recognition, spoken language understanding, and machine-learning applications.
He has appeared on CNN and has been interviewed by KGNU Radio, the Wall Street Journal,
Newsweek, and various newspapers about profitable business applications of these and related
technologies. He frequently represented U S WEST to regulators and utility commissions in
explaining the purpose, value, and accomplishments of U S WEST's work these areas. Dr. Cox has
been interviewed many times about topics related to human health risks of chemicals and antibiotics.
A presentation by Dr. Cox on animal antibiotic risks is described in the Science section of The New
York Times (2006)
Dr. Cox has also been interviewed by The Washington Post, The Denver Post, and other national
newspapers about potential risks of BSE (“mad cow” disease) in the US from imported Canadian
cattle. He has been interviewed and quoted on a variety of topics related to quantitative risk
assessment and modeling, including dose-response hormesis, infectious diseases, threats to children’s
health from chemicals, resistance to animal antibiotics, and terrorism risk analysis.
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/crime/wilson.htmfile:///C:/Users/Christine/Desktop/--D%20Drive--/MSHA’s%20Draft%20Quantitative%20Risk%20Assessment%20(QRA)%20of%20RCMD:%20%20Current%20flaws%20and%20possible%20fixes.%20%20Presentation%20at%20Mine%20Safety%20and%20Health%20(MSHA)%20Public%20Hearing.%20%20Arlingon,%20VA.%202-15-2011.%20%20%20www.msha.gov/REGS/Comments/2010-25249/Transcripts/20110215ArlingtonVA.pdfhttp://energycommerce.house.gov/hearings/hearingdetail.aspx?NewsID=9594http://docs.house.gov/meetings/SY/SY18/20140211/101743/HHRG-113-SY18-Wstate-CoxL-20140211.pdfhttps://www.osha.gov/silica/hearing_schedule.htmlhttp://docs.house.gov/meetings/IF/IF03/20150616/103610/HHRG-114-IF03-Wstate-CoxL-20150616.pdfhttp://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/21/science/21cafe.htmlhttp://www.nytimes.com/2006/02/21/science/21cafe.htmlhttp://www.mycattle.com/news/dsp_national_article.cfm?storyid=16360http://www.mymontana.com/?template=mymon_news_art&nid=3217;http://www.mymontana.com/?template=mymon_news_art&nid=3217;http://pubs.acs.org/subscribe/journals/esthag-w/2006/oct/science/rr_hormesis.htmlhttp://www.feedstuffsfoodlink.com/ME2/dirmod.asp?sid=&nm=&type=news&mod=News&mid=9A02E3B96F2A415ABC72CB5F516B4C10&tier=3&nid=8E922C15C43F43D39AB19CE4469A12BE
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
19
LOUIS ANTHONY COX, JR. PATENTS
Dr. Cox has applied risk analysis, statistical decision theory, and optimization principles to several
fields in new ways. He is inventor or co-inventor of the following innovations.
Speech Synthesis Using Perceptual Linear Prediction Parameters (U.S. Pat. # 5,165,008,
awarded November 17, 1992. Canadian Patent #2,074,418 awarded December 12, 1995.)
Method and System for Optimized Logistics Planning (U.S. Pat. # 5,450,317, awarded
September 12, 1995, http://www.patents.ibm.com/details?pn=US05450317__)
Method and System for Designing Least Cost Local Access Networks
(U.S. Patent #5,508,999, awarded April 16, 1996.)
Method and System for Planning and Installing Communication Networks.
(U.S. Patent #5,515,367, awarded May 7, 1996.)
Automated system and method for voice processing.
(U.S. Patent #5655006, awarded August 5, 1997.)
Method and system for identifying a corrupted speech message signal.
(U.S. Patent #5,684,921, awarded November 4, 1997.)
Method for providing a linguistically competent dialogue with a computerized service
representative. (U.S. Patent #5,685,000, awarded November 4, 1997.)
Method and system for developing network analysis and modeling with graphical objects. (U.S.
Patent #5,715,432, awarded February 3, 1998)
Adaptive knowledge base of complex information through interactive voice dialogue.
(U.S. Patent # 5,774,860, awarded June 30, 1998)
Method and system for linguistic command processing in a video server environment.
(U.S. Patent #5,832,439, awarded November 3, 1998)
Architecture and method for providing interactive broadband products and services using
existing telephone plant. (U.S. Patent #5,857,142, awarded January 4, 1999.)
http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/5857142.html
Method for annotating and editing voice messages via acoustic bullet points. (U.S. Patent
#5,943,402, awarded August 24th, 1999, http://www.patents.ibm.com/details?pn=US05943402__)
Calendar system with direct and telephony networked voice control interface. (U.S. Patent
#6,009,398, awarded December 28th, 1999,
http://www.patents.ibm.com/patlist?icnt=US&patent_number=6009398&x=27&y=11 )
Method and system for designing a cellular communication system. (U.S. Patent #6,181,917,
awarded January 30th, 2001, http://www.delphion.com/cgi-bin/viewpat.cmd/US06181917,
http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/6181917.html )
http://www.patents.ibm.com/details?pn=US05450317__http://www.google.com/patents?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&vid=USPAT5715432&id=xTgjAAAAEBAJ&oi=fnd&dq=%22L.+A.+Cox%22http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/5857142.htmlhttp://www.patents.ibm.com/details?pn=US05943402__http://www.patents.ibm.com/patlist?icnt=US&patent_number=6009398&x=27&y=11http://www.delphion.com/cgi-bin/viewpat.cmd/US06181917http://www.patentstorm.us/patents/6181917.html
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
20
LOUIS ANTHONY COX, JR., PH.D.
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
Books
Cox LA Jr. Quantitative Risk Analysis of Air Pollution Health Effects. Springer, 2021.
Cox LA Jr., Popken DA, Sun RX. Causal Analytics for Applied Risk Analysis. Springer,
2018. (Reviewed at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/risa.13295)
Cox LA Jr. (Ed.) Breakthroughs in Decision and Risk Analysis. Wiley, 2015.
(Reviewed at: https://sm.asisonline.org/Pages/Book-Review--Breakthroughs-in-Decision-
Science-and-Risk-Analysis.aspx)
Cox, LA Jr. Improving Risk Analysis. Springer. New York. 2013.
(Reviewed at: https://people.maths.ox.ac.uk/trefethen/wegert_review_SIREVDec13.pdf)
Cox, LA Jr. Risk Analysis of Complex and Uncertain Systems. Springer. New York.
2009. (Reviewed at http://pubsonline.informs.org/doi/pdf/10.1287/inte.1100.0506.)
Cox, LA Jr. Quantitative Health Risk Analysis Methods: Modeling the Human Health
Impacts of Antibiotics Used in Food Animals. Springer. New York. 2006.
Cox, LA Jr. Risk Analysis: Foundations, Models and Methods. Springer. New York.
2001. International Series in Operations Research & Management Science, 45.
Cox, LA Jr. and Ricci PF (eds), New Risks: Issues and Management. Plenum Press, 1990.
Murray, C.A., and LA Cox, Jr., Beyond Probation: Juvenile Corrections and the Chronic
Delinquent. Sage Publications, Beverly Hills, CA, 1979.
Encyclopedias
Wiley Encyclopedia of Operations Research and Management Science. 2011. Area
Editor for Decision Analysis, Risk Analysis, and Game Theory sections.
Wiley Encyclopedia of Quantitative Risk Analysis and Assessment, 2008 Area
Editor,RiskManagementSection.
https://www.springer.com/gp/book/9783030573577http://www.springer.com/us/book/9783319782409#aboutBookhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/risa.13295http://books.google.com/books/about/Breakthroughs_in_Decision_Science_and_Ri.html?id=Qh7tnAEACAAJhttps://sm.asisonline.org/Pages/Book-Review--Breakthroughs-in-Decision-Science-and-Risk-Analysis.aspxhttps://sm.asisonline.org/Pages/Book-Review--Breakthroughs-in-Decision-Science-and-Risk-Analysis.aspxhttp://www.springer.com/business+%26+management/operations+research/book/978-1-4614-6057-2https://people.maths.ox.ac.uk/trefethen/wegert_review_SIREVDec13.pdfhttp://www.springer.com/business/operations+research/book/978-0-387-89013-5http://pubsonline.informs.org/doi/pdf/10.1287/inte.1100.0506http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/0387259090/ref=sib_dp_pop_toc/105-4393602-7288450?ie=UTF8&p=S00B#reader-linkhttp://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/0387259090/ref=sib_dp_pop_toc/105-4393602-7288450?ie=UTF8&p=S00B#reader-linkhttp://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0792376153/ref=pd_ecc_rvi_1/002-3129629-0743252?%5Fencoding=UTF8http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0306435373/qid=1146931965/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_1/102-5343387-9008939?s=books&v=glance&n=283155https://books.google.com/books/about/Beyond_probation.html?id=42xHAAAAMAAJhttps://books.google.com/books/about/Beyond_probation.html?id=42xHAAAAMAAJhttp://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0470400633.htmlhttp://www.wiley.com/go/risk
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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Edited Collections
Cox T, Lowrie K. Preparing for, Responding to, and Recovering from Hurricane
Flooding Disasters. On-Line Special Issue of Risk Analysis: An International Journal.
Wiley-Blackwell. 2018.
Aven T., Cox LA Jr. Simple Characterizations and Communication of Risks. On-Line
Special Issue of Risk Analysis: An International Journal. Wiley-Blackwell. 2016.
Aven T., Cox LA Jr. Foundations of Risk Analysis. On-Line Special Issue of Risk
Analysis: An International Journal. Wiley-Blackwell. 2015.
Greenberg, M.R., and Cox, LA Jr. Economics of Risk Analysis. On-Line Special Issue of
Risk Analysis: An International Journal. Wiley-Blackwell. 2014.
Haas C.N., Cox LA Jr. Risk Analysis of Influenza. On-Line Special Issue of Risk
Analysis: An International Journal. Wiley-Blackwell. 2013.
Cox LA Jr. and Greenberg M.R. (Eds) Advances in Terrorism Risk Analysis. On-Line
Special Issue of Risk Analysis: An International Journal. Wiley-Blackwell. 2011.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/page/journal/15396924/homepage/special_issue__preparing_for__responding_to__and_recovering_from_hurricane_flood.htmhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/page/journal/15396924/homepage/special_issue__preparing_for__responding_to__and_recovering_from_hurricane_flood.htmhttp://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1539-6924/homepage/special_issue__simple_characterisations_and_communication_of_risks.htmhttp://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1539-6924/homepage/special_issue__foundations_of_risk_analysis.htmhttp://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291539-6924/homepage/special_issue__economics_of_risk_analysis.htmhttp://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1539-6924/homepage/special_issue__risk_analysis_of_influenza.htmhttp://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1539-6924/homepage/custom_copy.htm
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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Journal Articles, Book Chapters, Etc.
Cox LA Jr. (2020) Answerable and unanswerable questions in risk analysis with open-
world novelty. Risk Analysis. Nov;40(S1):2144-2177. doi: 10.1111/risa.13553.
Cox LA Jr. (2020) Higher line speed in young chicken slaughter establishments does not
predict increased Salmonella contamination risks. Poultry Science. (forthcoming)
Greenberg MR, Cox A, Bier V, Lambert J, Lowrie K, North W, Siegrist M, Wu F.
(2020) Risk analysis: Celebrating the accomplishments and embracing ongoing
challenges. Risk Analysis. Nov; 40(S1):2113-2127. doi: 10.1111/risa.13487.
Cox LA Jr, Popken DA. (2020) Should air pollution health effects assumptions be tested?
Fine particulate matter and COVID-19 mortality as an example. Global Epidemiology
2020 Sep 2:100033. doi: 10.1016/j.gloepi.2020.100033.
Cox L.A. Jr. (2020) Re: “Causal effects of air pollution on mortality rate in
Massachusetts.” Letter to the Editor. American Journal of Epidemiology. September,
2020
Cox LA Jr. (2020) Using Bayesian networks to clarify interpretation of exposure-
response regression coefficients: blood lead-mortality association as an example. Critical
Reviews in Toxicology 2020 Sep 9:1-12. doi: 10.1080/10408444.2020.1787329.
Cox LA Jr. (2020). Thinking better: Six recent books on natural, artificial, and social
intelligence. Risk Analysis. 40(6):1302-19.
Cox LA Jr. (2020) Implications of nonlinearity, confounding, and interactions for
estimating exposure concentration-response functions in quantitative risk analysis.
Environmental Research;187:109638.
Cox LA Jr, Goodman JE, Engel AM. (2020) Chronic inflammation, adverse outcome
pathways, and risk assessment: A diagrammatic exposition. Regul Toxicol Pharmacol.;
114:104663. doi:10.1016/j.yrtph.2020.104663
Cox LA Jr. (2020) Target Sites: Cardiovascular. Chapter 51 in P. Wexler et al. (Eds.)
Information Resources in Toxicology: 5th Edition. Elsevier. Academic Press.
Cox LA Jr. (2020) Target Sites: Hematopoietic. Chapter 54 in P. Wexler et al. (Eds.)
Information Resources in Toxicology: 5th Edition. Elsevier. Academic Press.
Cox LA Jr, Popken DA, Sun J, Liao XP, Fang LX. (2020) Quantifying human health
risks from virginiamycin use in food animals in China. Risk Analysis. 40(6); 1244-1257.
10.1111/risa.13466. doi:10.1111/risa.13466
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/risa.13553https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/risa.13553https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0032579120307367https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0032579120307367https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/risa.13487https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/risa.13487https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32905083/https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32905083/https://academic.oup.com/aje/advance-article-abstract/doi/10.1093/aje/kwaa186/5901583?redirectedFrom=fulltexthttps://academic.oup.com/aje/advance-article-abstract/doi/10.1093/aje/kwaa186/5901583?redirectedFrom=fulltexthttps://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32903110/https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32903110/https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/risa.13503https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/risa.13503https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32450424/?from_term=Cox+LA+Jr&from_cauthor_id=18793278&from_pos=1https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32450424/?from_term=Cox+LA+Jr&from_cauthor_id=18793278&from_pos=1https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32330641/?from_term=Cox+LA+Jr&from_cauthor_id=18793278&from_pos=2https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32330641/?from_term=Cox+LA+Jr&from_cauthor_id=18793278&from_pos=2https://www.elsevier.com/books/information-resources-in-toxicology/wexler/978-0-12-813724-6file:///C:/Users/Christine/Downloads/Cox%20LA%20Jr.%20(2020)%20Target%20Sites:%20Cardiovascular.%20%20Chapter%2051%20in%20P.%20Wexler%20et%20al.%20(Eds.)%20Information%20Resources%20in%20Toxicology:%205th%20Edition.%20%20Elsevier.%20Academic%20Presshttps://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32315459/?from_term=Cox+LA+Jr&from_cauthor_id=18793278&from_pos=3https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32315459/?from_term=Cox+LA+Jr&from_cauthor_id=18793278&from_pos=3
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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Maldonado G, Cox LA Jr. (2020). Causal reasoning in epidemiology: Philosophy and
logic. Global Epidemiology. https://doi.org/ 10.1016/j.gloepi.2020.100020
Cox LA, Jr. (2020) Nonlinear dose-time-response functions and health-protective
exposure limits for inflammation-mediated diseases. Environmental Research 182, March
2020. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2019.109026
Cox LA, Jr. (2020) Dose-response modeling of NLRP3 inflammasome-mediated
diseases: Asbestos, lung cancer, and malignant mesothelioma as examples. Critical
Reviews in Toxicology. 2020 Jan 6:1-22. doi: 10.1080/10408444.2019.1692779.
Cox LA, Jr. (2020). Book Review of On Grand Strategy. Risk Analysis 40(20): 435-438.
Cox LA Jr. Ambient air pollution and mortality in 652 cities. Letter to the Editor. N Engl
J Med. 2019 Nov 21;381(21):2074. doi: 10.1056/NEJMc1913285.
Cox LA.(2019) Should health risks of air pollution be studied scientifically? Global
Epidemiology 1 (Nov.) 2019. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloepi.2019.100015
Cox LA, Simon TW, Becker RA. (2019) The Predictive Analytics Toolkit (PAT): User-
friendly predictive analytics for advancing new approach methodologies (NAMs).
Computational Toxicology 12 (Nov 2019).
Cox LA Jr. (2019) Shapes and definitions of exposure-response curves: A comment on
“A matrix for bridging the epidemiology and risk assessment gap.” Global Epidemiology.
1 (Nov.) 2019.
Cox LA. Book Review of The Model Thinker: What You Need to Know to Make Data
Work for You. Risk Analysis 39(12): 2786-2789.
Cox, T. (2019). Muddling-through and deep learning for managing large-scale uncertain
risks. Journal of Benefit-Cost Analysis, 10(2), 226-250. doi:10.1017/bca.2019.17
Cox LA Jr. (2019) Improving causal determination. Global Epidemiology. Nov. 1(1).
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloepi.2019.100004
Cox T. (2019) Learning causal graph models from data. Wiley StatsRef: Statistics
Reference Online. DOI: 10.1002/9781118445112.stat08149
Cox LA. (2019) Causal prediction and forecasting. Wiley StatsRef: Statistics Reference
Online. DOI: 10.1002/9781118445112.stat08147
Cox LA. (2019) Causal graph models for predictive and prescriptive analytics. Wiley
StatsRef: Statistics Reference Online. DOI: 10.1002/9781118445112.stat08146
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590113320300043https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590113320300043https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0013935119308230https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0013935119308230https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envres.2019.109026https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31905042?dopt=Abstract&utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitterhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31905042?dopt=Abstract&utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitterhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/risa.13406https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31747736https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloepi.2019.100015https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2468111319300350?via%3Dihubhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2468111319300350?via%3Dihubhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloepi.2019.100006https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloepi.2019.100006https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/risa.13388?af=Rhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/risa.13388?af=Rhttps://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-benefit-cost-analysis/article/muddlingthrough-and-deep-learning-for-managing-largescale-uncertain-risks/48F4D5371FDB784999862E31C7F587D8https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-benefit-cost-analysis/article/muddlingthrough-and-deep-learning-for-managing-largescale-uncertain-risks/48F4D5371FDB784999862E31C7F587D8https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590113319300045?via%3Dihubhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloepi.2019.100004https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/9781118445112.stat08149https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/9781118445112.stat08147https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/9781118445112.stat08146
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COX ASSOCIATES 503 Franklin St., Denver, CO, 80218. Ph 303-388-1778; Fax 303-388-0609 www.cox-associates.com
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Cox LA Jr. (2019) Risk analysis implications of dose-response thresholds for NLRP3
inflammasome-mediated diseases: Respirable crystalline silica and lung cancer as an
example. Dose Response. https://doi.org/10.1177/1559325819836900
Cox LA Jr. (2019). Communicating more clearly about deaths caused by air pollution.
Global Epidemiology. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloepi.2019.100003
Cox LA. Book review: Behaving Better – Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best
and Worst by Robert M. Sapolsky, Penguin Press, 2017, and 12 Rules for Life: An
Antidote to Chaos by Jordan B. Peterson, Random House Canada, 2018. Risk Analysis.
2019 39(2):505-508 DOI: 10.1111/risa.13266
Cox LA Jr. Modernizing the Bradford Hill criteria for assessing causal relationships in
observational data. Critical Reviews in Toxicology. 2018 Nov 15:1-31. doi:
10.1080/10408444.2018.1518404.
Cox LAT. Book Review: Ten Great Ideas About Chance by PersiDiaconis and Brian
Skyrms (Princeton University Press, 2018). Risk Analysis. 2018 Nov; 38(11): 2497-
2501.
Cox LAT Jr. Socioeconomic and particulate air pollution correlates of heart disease risk.
Environ Res. 2018 Nov;167:386-392. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2018.07.023.
Cox LA. Effects of exposure estimation errors on estimated exposure-response relations
for PM2.5. Environ Res. 2018 Jul;164:636-646. doi: 10.1016/j.envres.2018.03.038.
Cox LAT Jr. Biological mechanisms of non-linear dose-response for respirable mineral
fibers. Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. 2018 Jun 19. pii: S0041-008X(18)30282-5. doi:
10.1016/j.taap.2018.06.016.
Cox, LA Jr. Air pollution and mortality in the Medicare population. JAMA. 2018 May
22; 319(20):2134-2135. doi: 10.1001/jama.2018.3923. Letter to the Editor.
Cox LA Jr. RE: "Best practices for gauging evidence of causality in air pollution
epidemiology". Am J Epidemiol. 2018 Mar 23. doi: 10.1093/aje/kwy034. Letter to the
Editor.
Cox T. Uncertain causation, regulation, and the courts. Supreme Court Economic Review.
2016 24(1): 197-254. https://doi.org/10.1086/697315 (Published in 2018)
Cox LA Jr. Bier VM. Probabilistic Risk Analysis. Chapter 1 in VM Bier (Ed), Risk in
Extreme Environments: Preparing, Avoiding,Mitigating, Managing. 2018.
Cox LA Jr. Quantifying and Reducing Uncertainty about Causality in Public Health and
Safety Risk Analysis. In Ghenam R et al. (Eds), Springer Handbook of Uncertainty
Quantification. 2017.
https://doi.org/10.1177%2F1559325819836900https://doi.org/10.1177%2F1559325819836900https://doi.org/10.1177%2F1559325819836900https://doi.org/10.1177%2F1559325819836900https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloepi.2019.100003https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloepi.2019.100003https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/risa.13266?af=Rhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/risa.13266?af=Rhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/risa.13266?af=Rhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30433840https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30433840https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/risa.13196https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/risa.13196https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30098525https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29627760https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29627760https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29932955https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29932955https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29800166https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29584873https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29584873https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10.1086/697315https://doi.org/10.1086/697315https://www.amazon.com/Risk-Extreme-Environments-Preparing-Mitigating-ebook/dp/B076KMJ1J8https://www.amazon.com/Risk-Extreme-Environments-Preparing-Mitigating-ebook/dp/B076KMJ1J8https://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007/978-3-319-11259-6_71-1https://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007/978-3-319-11259-6_71-1http://www.springer.com/us/book/9783319123844http://www.springer.com/us/book/9783319123844
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